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1.
Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.) ; 45(6): 506-517, Nov.-Dec. 2023. tab
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1534002

ABSTRACT

Objectives: To present evidence-based guidelines for clinical practice regarding religiosity and spirituality in mental health care in Brazil. Methods: A systematic review was conducted to identify potentially eligible articles indexed in the PubMed, PsycINFO, SciELO, LILACS, and Cochrane databases. A summary of recommendations and their levels of evidence was produced in accordance with Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine guidelines. Results: The systematic review identified 6,609 articles, 41 of which satisfied all inclusion criteria. Taking a spiritual history was found to be an essential part of a compassionate and culturally sensitive approach to care. It represents a way of obtaining relevant information about the patient's religiosity/spirituality, potential conflicts that could impact treatment adherence, and improve patient satisfaction. Consistent evidence shows that reported perceptual experiences are unreliable for differentiating between anomalous experiences and psychopathology. Negative symptoms, cognitive and behavioral disorganization, and functional impairment are more helpful for distinguishing pathological and non-pathological anomalous experiences. Conclusion: Considering the importance of religiosity/spirituality for many patients, a spiritual history should be routinely included in mental health care. Anomalous experiences are highly prevalent, requiring a sensitive and evidence-based approach to differential diagnosis.

2.
Braz. J. Psychiatry (São Paulo, 1999, Impr.) ; 41(5): 411-418, Sept.-Oct. 2019. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1039100

ABSTRACT

Objective: To test the reliability and the discriminant and convergent validity of the abbreviated Brazilian Portuguese World Health Organization's Quality of Life Instrument - Spirituality, Religion, and Personal Beliefs module (WHOQOL-SRPB BREF). Methods: In a sample of 404 individuals, we applied a general questionnaire, the WHOQOL-BREF, the long-form SRPB, the Brief Religious-Spiritual Coping Scale (RCOPE), and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Priority was given to the 9-item SRPB assessment: its unidimensionality was tested through confirmatory factor analysis and Rasch analysis. Results: Confirmatory factor analysis of the 9-item SRPB assessment indicated an adjusted model with acceptable fit to data. In the Rasch analysis, general fit measures showed adequate performance. The 9-item SRPB assessment showed good internal consistency (alpha = 0.85), and could differentiate (discriminant validity) between religious and atheist/agnostic respondents (mean = 74.7±14.1 and 56.8±15.5, respectively; t = 6.37; degrees of freedom [df] = 402; p < 0.01) and between non-depressed and depressed respondents (mean = 76.5±12.9 and 67.1±16.5; t = 5.57; df = 190.5; p < 0.01). Correlations (convergent validity) were significant with the positive-RCOPE subscale (r = 0.58, p < 0.01) and the WHOQOL-BREF domains (Pearson coefficient ranging between 0.24 and 0.49; p < 0.01), but were in the negative direction with the negative-RCOPE subscale (r = -0.10, p < 0.05). Correlation with the long-form SRPB domain (r = 0.934) was almost perfect. Conclusion: The Brazilian Portuguese 9-item SRPB has good psychometric properties and confirmed the findings of the long-form Brazilian Portuguese version and the abbreviated English version.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Young Adult , Quality of Life/psychology , Religion and Psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires/standards , Spirituality , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Psychometrics , World Health Organization , Brazil , Cross-Sectional Studies , Probability , Reproducibility of Results , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Culture , Latent Class Analysis , Language , Middle Aged
3.
HU rev ; 44(4): 425-429, 2018.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1051284

ABSTRACT

As relações entre espiritualidade/religiosidade e Psiquiatria no Brasil passaram por momentos distintos. Os relatos estão fragmentados e distribuídos em diversas fontes. Em uma revisão narrativa esse artigo tem por objetivo oferecer uma visão geral dos protagonistas e principais fatos de cada etapa, desde o século XIX até os dias atuais. A nomeação de Juliano Moreira, em 1903, para a direção do Hospital Nacional dos Alienados (Rio de Janeiro/RJ) é o marco inicial da Psiquiatria cientifica brasileira. O pano de fundo é a visão Positivista do mundo e do ser humano, com a expectativa de que a ciência suplantaria todas as crenças religiosas e metafísicas. Foi preciso que o vigor da Modernidade esmaecesse para que outro entendimento aflorasse. Nas últimas décadas do século XX psiquiatras receptivos ao tema das crenças conseguiram abrir espaços em associações profissionais para debater sobre espiritualidade e somente a partir da década de 1990 as pesquisas nacionais em Psiquiatria começaram a incluir a espiritualidade. Desde então, o conjunto de evidências cresceu célere, mas consistentemente. Em nível mundial ­ e em menos de três décadas - o Brasil já está entre os cinco países com maior número de publicações sobre espiritualidade/religiosidade e saúde mental, com potencial para permanecer em posição de destaque, pois possui população com grande religiosidade, ao mesmo tempo em que surge uma nova geração de pesquisadores engajados no tema


The relations between spirituality / religiosity and psychiatry in Brazil went through different moments. Reports are fragmented and distributed across multiple sources. In a narrative review this article aims to provide an overview of the protagonists and key facts of each stage from the 19th century to the present day. The appointment of Juliano Moreira, in 1903, to the direction of the Alienados National Hospital (Rio de Janeiro/RJ) is the initial milestone of Brazilian scientific psychiatry. The background is the Positivist view of the world and human being, with the expectation that science would supersede all religious and metaphysical beliefs. The vigor of Modernity had to weaken for another understanding to emerge. In the last decades of the 20th century, psychiatrists receptive to the theme of beliefs were able to open spaces in professional associations to discuss spirituality and not until the 1990s did national research in psychiatry begin to include spirituality. Since then, the body of evidence has grown rapidly but consistently. Worldwide - and in less than three decades - Brazil is already among the five countries with the highest number of publications on spirituality/religiosity and mental health, with the potential to remain in a prominent position, as it has a highly religious population, while emerges a new generation of researchers engaged in the theme.


Subject(s)
Spirituality , Psychiatry , Religion and Medicine , Mental Health
4.
Rev. ABP-APAL ; 15(3): 82-6, jul.-set. 1993. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-178134

ABSTRACT

Os autores realizaram um levantamento em forma de question rio em 1990, em que estudaram as características demogr ficas e a pr tica de consultório de uma amostra de psiquiatras do Rio Grande do Sul. Concluída essa etapa, estendeu-se a consulta para outros cinco estados do país. Säo Paulo foi o estado escolhido para uma an lise comparativa preliminar com os dados do Rio Grande do Sul, por ter sido o primeiro a atingir um mínimo de 10 por cento de respostas. Detectaram-se algumas semelhanças e diferenças entre as duas amostras: predominância de homens em ambas, psiquiatras paulistas em média mais velhos e com mais anos de pr tica do que os gaúchos, maior quantidade de psiquiatras paulistas com formaçäo analítica, sendo que existem semelhanças quanto aos tratamentos pessoais e grupos de estudo. Quanto à pr tica de consultório, a psicoterapia de orientaçäo analítica predomina no Rio Grande do Sul, enquanto a clínica psiqui trica predomina em Säo Paulo


Subject(s)
Humans , Demography , Professional Practice , Psychiatry
5.
Rev. AMRIGS ; 35(2): 70-3, abr.-jun. 1991. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-99860

ABSTRACT

A partir de trabalhos sobre prescricoes hospitalares para adultos, realizou-se uma analise dos medicamentos prescritos para pacientes pediatricos hospitalizados. Foram avaliadas as prescricoes em um hospital-escola, em tres dias diferentes, com intervalos de um mes, durante o ano de 1988. As criancas recebiam em media 4,5 prescricoes por dia. As drogas de acao no trato respiratorio e as de uso topico apareceram entre as mais prescritas para criancas, juntamente com os analgesicos-antipireticos-antiinflamatorios, os antiinfecciosos e as drogas de acao no trato gastrointestinal. Estes tres ultimos tiveram perfil semelhante ao dos adultos. O uso de aminoglicosideos apresentou-se sem acompanhamanto adequado da funcao renal, bem como o uso geral de antiinfecciosos foi precedido poucas vezes de antibiograma, Por outro lado, o perfil do uso de psicofarmacos foi significativamente diferente ao dos adultos


Subject(s)
Child , Humans , Male , Female , Hospitals, Pediatric , Hospitals, Teaching , Inpatients , Pharmaceutical Preparations/administration & dosage , Drug Prescriptions , Reference Standards , Brazil , Drug Utilization , Prospective Studies
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